No. Water and ice do not make a homogeneous mixture.
No, ice cubes in liquid water are considered a homogeneous mixture because they form a single phase with uniform composition throughout, despite the presence of two different states of water (solid ice and liquid water).
Yes. Salt water is a homogeneous mixture.
Vodka is a homogenous mixture; it consists of water, alcohol, and a few other things.
An aqueous phase is a homogenous part of a heterogenous system which consists of water or a solution in water of a substance.
Yes. Pure air is a homogenous mixture. Air is a mixture of various kinds of gases. A mixture is said to be homogenous when all its constituents are in phase. Example, a mixture of water & milk is a homogenous mixture, as water & milk both are liquids & are in phase. Same is the case with pure air. All the constituents gases of pure air are in phase with each other. Hence its a homogenous mixture.
Ice in water is a heterogenous mix because even though ice is made of water the ice can still be seen. An homogenous mix is one where the different substances are totally mixed and it appears as one substance.
homogenous
Ice is considered homogeneous because it is made up of pure water molecules arranged in a uniform structure. This means that the composition and properties of ice are consistent throughout, making it a homogeneous substance.
Tea and ice would be e heterogeneous mixture.
Yes. Homogenous refers to if the solution is consistant looking throughout. Oil and water, for example, would not be homogenous because water is polar and oil is usually non-polar and would not mix.
A mixture of salt and water, if stirred until the salt is completely dissolved, is a homogenous mixture.
One substance mixing with more of the same substance is not called dissolving, it's just mixing. Ice does not really dissolve in water, it just melts and then becomes part of the water.Added:Ice IS pure water in solid state, the water you mean is pure water in liquid state.When ice (solid) melts it becomes water (liquid)
No
homogenous.
No, ice cubes in liquid water are considered a homogeneous mixture because they form a single phase with uniform composition throughout, despite the presence of two different states of water (solid ice and liquid water).
Sea water is not a homogeneous mixture.
no, heterogeneous